South Africa's Zuma takes anti-rape campaign to the classroom

CAPE TOWN (Reuters) - President Jacob Zuma launched an anti-rape campaign targeting South Africa's 10 million schoolchildren on Thursday, an attempt to tackle some of the world's highest levels of sexual violence in a country where many are inured to reports of such crimes.

Girls and boys suffer sexual abuse, bullying and rape in the classroom and playground on a regular basis, according to domestic media reports, and researchers say many youngsters do not know what is right and wrong.

"What we are launching today is not a women's campaign. It is everybody's campaign," said Zuma, who was himself acquitted in a 2006 rape case while serving as deputy president.

Police and the justice system notoriously fail to do their part in protecting victims and prosecuting perpetrators. Even when rape suspects are caught, only 12 percent of cases end in conviction. This month, a 2-year-old girl was raped by a man out on bail for two other sexual offences, local media reported.

The gang rape, mutilation and murder of a 17-year-old near Cape Town, also this month, sparked outrage, and calls for tougher penalties for offenders, including chemical castration.

The high-profile arrest of Olympic track star Oscar Pistorius for shooting his girlfriend - a model and gender activist - a week later added impetus to the drive, which also drew inspiration from the massive protests in India at the gang rape and murder of a woman on a New Delhi bus.

Last year, a 17-year-old girl in Soweto was gang-raped by seven men who recorded the incident on a cellphone video that then went viral. The seven are yet to stand trial.

"We have come together to say that these horrendous attacks must stop," Zuma told a packed hall at Glendale Secondary School in Mitchell's Plain, an impoverished township 25 km (15 miles) east of Cape Town.
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